

.m 



HOLLINGER 

pH8.5 

MILL RUN F3-1543 



E 426 
.HIS 
Copy 1 



SPEECH 



OF 



/ 



HON. W. P. HALL, UF MISSOURI, 




'^. 



DELIVERED 



IN COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE, THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE BEING UNDER 

CONSIDERATION; 



THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, DECEMBER 11, 1851. 



WASHINGTON: 

PRINTED AT THE CONGRESSIONAL GLOBE OFFICE. 

1851. 



\ 






SPEECH. 



Mr. HALL said: Mr. Chairman, it is not my ; 
intention to discuss the President's message. By 
the indulgence of the committee, I design to say a 
few words with reference to a bill I introduced 
into the House on yesterday. That bill proposes 
to grant to the State of Missouri the right of 
way and a portion of the public domain to aid in ; 
the construction of a railroad from Hannibal to 
St. Joseph. Some gentlemen seem startled at tlie 
project. I assure tliem it is nothing new nor un- j 
heard-of in the history of our country. It is only i 
about fifteen months since Congress made an ex- 
tensive grant of land to the State of Illinois, to aid 
in the construction of a railroad from Chicago to 
Mobile bay. I am not aware that that grant has 
ruined or seriously injured either this Government, 
or any State, or any individual. On the contrary, 
I believe it has been of general benefit. At all 
events, the road it was intended to promote will 
be one of vast importance, and is destined to exert 
a most happy influence on the country at large. 
It is not, however, to l)e concealed that the Chica- 
go and Mobile road must run nearly parallel with 
the greatest river on our continent, and must enter 
into competition with most of the great thorough- 
fares of the West. All the rivers of our great 
valley tend from the North to the South. The 
Ohio and its tributaries on the one hand, and the 
Missouri, the Arkansas, and the Red river and 
their tributaries on the other, in conjunction witli 
the Mississippi, open up the entire West to New 
Orleans and the Gulf of Mexico. But between 
the Atlantic seaboard and the New States there is 
no direct natural channel of intercommunication. 
Commerce can be carried on successfully between 
the old States and the Mississippi valley only by 
doubling Cape Sable or through means of artifi- 
cial avenues extending from the Atlantic coast far 
into the interior. Hence if the last Congress was 
justifiable in aiding the construction of a railroad 
from the northern lakes to the Gulf of Mexico, 
we shall be more than justified in aiding the con- 
struction of a highway from the extreme confines 
of Missouri to the States this side of the Allegha- 
nies — a highway which will open a direct, speedy, 
safe, and economical communication between parts 
of the Union that now hold intercourse only by 
the most circuitous, tardy, hazardous, and expen- 
sive routes. The Hannibal and St. Joseph rail- 
road will form an important part of such a line of 
intercommunication . 

The town of Hamiibal is situated on the west 
bank of the Mississippi river, in latitude 39'^ 45' 



north. The town of Saint Joseph is one hundred 
and eighty miles due west of Hannibal, on the 
east bank of the Missouri river. The city of 
Philadelphia, and the seats of government of Ohio, 
Indiana, and Illinois, are nearly on the same par- 
allel of latitude with the town of Hannibal. So 
that a railroad running due west from Philadelphia 
would pass through the centre of the States of 
Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois, cross the Mississippi 
at Hannibal, and strike the Missouri at Saint Jo- 
seph. Within eighteen months a railroad will be 
completed from Philadelphia to Pittsburg. Within 
the same time a railroad will be finished from 
Pittsburg to Columbus, Ohio. A railroad is nearly 
finished between Terre Haute, near the western 
line of Indiana, to Indianapolis, in that State. The 
Illinois cross-cut railroad is already finished from 
Springfield to the Illinois river, and in less than 
two years will be finished to the town of Gluincy, 
which is only twelve miles from Hannibal; so that 
in the course of a few years we may reasonably ex- 
pect to see a railroad communication complete 
between Philadelphia and the Mississippi river. 
1 The construction of the Hannibal and Saint Jo- 
' seph railroad will complete the connection as far 
I west as the Missouri. The same chain of rail- 
I roads, too, which will connect the western por- 
I tions of the State of Missouri with Philadelphia, 
I will unite with that great railway line already 
I extending from New York city to Cincinnati, and 
{ also with the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, and 
j with the road from Louisville, by way of Nash- 
I ville, to Savannah, Georgia, and to Charleston, 
South Carolina. Thus, in a few years, may we 
hope to see the banks of the Missouri river, and 
the fertile country bordering thereon, brought with- 
in three days' travel of the metropolis of the 
I Union, and of the great cities of Charleston, Bal- 
j timore, Philadelphia, New York, and Boston. 
' Nor is this all. The railroad from Chicago to the 
mouth of the Ohio river is to be completed within 
j a few years. The Hannibal and Saint Joseph 
railroad will connect with the Chicago and Cairo 
ro;\d, by means of the Springfield, Illinois, railroad. 
In this way will be opened to the South and to the 
northern lakes, as well as to the Atlantic seaboard, 
all the fertile country included within northern 
1 Missouri, and all that immense country to the 
j west of our State, which is destined in a few years 
i to be the home of multitudes of white men. Let 
any one, sir, turn to the map of the United States, 
anil endeavor to trace out the line of railroads 
I which will most promote the welfare of the whole 



country, and he will inevitably fall upon that 
very line of which the Hannibal and Saint Joseph 
railroad makes a part. That road is on the par- 
allel of latitude which passes midway between the 
northern boundary of the United States and the 
mouth of the Mississippi river. It is on the hne 
which passes through the heart of Missouri, Illi- 
nois, Indiana, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. It is 
on the line which passes between the north- 
ern lakes and the Ohio river, at nearly an equal 
distance from each. It is on the line which divides 
the population of the United States into two equ£il 
parts. It is on the line which connects at the same 
time with the great New York, Pennsylvania, 
Maryland, Virginia, and southern railroads, and 
by means of which, therefore, more distant and 
more numerous points of the Union can be brought 
into easy communication than any other which 
can be conceived. 

The opening of good roads between the eastern 
and western portions of the Union has been a 
favorite object with our greatest statesmen almost 
from the foundation of our Government. The 
Cumberland turnpike was projected by one of the 
" early Presidents," and has been carried forward 
at the expense of millions of dollars. In conse- 
quence of modern improvements, that work has 
become nearly useless. But the time has been 
when the Cumberland road, by its promise of 
opening a way from the old to the new States, was 
a mucii-cherished object with a large portion of 
the American people. It is now proposed to effect 
the same purpose by the greatest of modern im- 
provements without the cost of a dollar to the 
Government — without the exercise of any danger- 
ous or doubtful power, by the mere appropriation 
of a small portion of the public domain in a man- 
ner that will cover it with an industrious and 
active population, and convertit from a wilderness 
to cultivated farms and flourishing villages. There 
is no portion of this vast country which contains 
so large an area of fertile land, in proportion to 
its extent of surface, as northern Missouri. Yet 
that fertile and beautiful region is, to a great de- 
gree, a waste, because it possesses no channel for 
the transportation of its products. Its citizens 
are almost entirely dependent upon the Missouri 
river for getting to and returning from the markets 
of the country. That river is closed to steamboats 
for four months every year, and during the re- 
mainder of the time it is so difficult of navigation 
that tho.'se who ship by it are subject to much 
higher charges for transportation and insurance 
than the citizens of the neighboring States. The 
consequence is, that the farmers who live in the 
interior of northern Missouri, are almost as effect- 
ually shut out from all commerce with other sec- 
tions of the country as though tliey laid at the 
North pole. The Hannibal and St. .To.seph rail- 
road i.s to penetrate the very centre of that entire 
section, and will bring it as near market as some 
portions of the Atlantic States. Our farmers, 
stimulated by fair jirices for their produce, will 
open large farms, and our products will be multi- 
plied many fold. To the southern and eastern 
States we will sell stock, provisions, and our 
other staples. From them we will receive in return 
sugar, cotton, salt, rice, and fabrics. As our 
means increase our consumption will increase also. 
We will consume not only articles of domestic 
but of foreign manufacture, and thus, while we 



shall add to the home trade, we shall also increase 
the foreign commerce of the country, and swell 
the resources of the Government. 

If a proposition were submitted to connect New 
York or Boston with the extreme settlements of 
Missouri, all would admit the importance of the 
enterprise. Some would be willing, no doubt, to 
construct the road at the expense of the nation. 
No such charge upon the Treasury is, however, 
required in ortler to consummate a railroad commu- 
nication between the Missouri and the Atlantic 
seaboard. A railroad is nearly finished from New 
York city to Cincinnati. Indiana is extending 
this road to her western boundary. Illinois is 
extending it through her territory to the Missis- 
sippi river; and all that is necessary to complete 
the entire chain of railroad from Boston to Saint 
Joseph — indeed from Portland, Maine, to Saint 
Joseph — is to construct a railroad through the 
northern part of Missouri. 

The people of Missouri have, by an act of their 
Legislature, appropriated $1,500,000 to the Han- 
nibal and Saint Joseph railroad. Counties and 
individuals have taken a large amount of stock in 
the work. And now we ask Congress to do for 
us what they have so frequently done for other 
States. We ask you to give us alternate sections 
of the public lands, through which our road will 
pass, for six miles on each side of the road, to aid 
us in our enterprise This is not a proposition to 
take money out of the Treasury. If it was I 
would not advocate it. The effect of the proposi- 
tion will be, in my opinion, to increase the revenues 
of the Government. And why .' Because the 
alternate sections reserved by the United States 
are not to be sold for less than two dollars and a 
half per acre. Now they are liable to entry at 
one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre. So that 
you will receive as much, at least, from the public 
lands if this grant be made, as you will receive 
if it fail. Do gentlemen fear that the value of the 
public domain will not be enhanced by our road.' 
let me beg them to look at our condition, at our 
soil, as fertile as any in the world; at our situation, 
possessing none but the most expensive and tardy 
means of reaching a market, and then to reflect on 
the effect which similar roads have had elsewhere. 
No such work has ever been made even through the 
most densely settled sections, which has not great- 
ly enhanced the real estate in its neighborhood. 
How much greater enhancement of lands must 
follow the construction of a railroad through such 
a section as northern Missouri. It is now oc.upied 
by some three hundred thousand people; it is capable 
of sustaining a population of several millions. 
The making a railwaj^ through it will pour immi- 
grants into it until every foot of land .shall be occu- 
pied and improved. Its citizens now need mills, 
schools, churches, and many of the comforts of 
I life. A railroad will secure to them all these ad- 
vantages at one and the same time. In view of 
1 these facts, it is a most stubborn skepticism which 
j doubts that the construction of the Hannibal and 
Saint Joseph railroad will appreciate the lands 
near it twofold or more. That appreciation will 
not be confined to the lands within six miles of 
the road. It will extend to lands even fifteen and 
twenty miles from it. Public lands that are not 
worth fifty cents an acre will readily bring the 
I minimum price. Lands that soldiers will not lo- 
I cate with their warrants will be eagerly .sought for 



this purpose, and the income of the Government 
from the public lands will be greatly augmented. 
This is not fancy. During the last Congres.s mil- 
lions of acres of public lands were given to soldiers. 
It was confidently predicted here and elsewhere that 
for many years we would, in consequence of the 
military grants, receive no money from the public 
lands; and yet we find that our revenues from that 
source have greatly increased within the last year, 
and are still rapidly increasing. Why is this.' 
Solely because numerous railroads are projected ] 
in the new States through the public domain. ] 
Some of these roads are now constructing. They 
have so largely appreciated the public lands that 
millions of acres are now bought which until re- ; 
cently were a drug in the market. This fact, and i 
this alone, explains why it is that the receipts 
from the public lands have increased, notwith- | 
standing the bounty act of the last Congress ■ 
and the immense emigration which has recently 
gone from the- Western States to Oregon and Cal- , 
ifornia. :i 

There is another piece of history in connection | 
with this matter, to which I must refer gentlemen 
of the committee. The only acts granting lands 
to new States, besides the Illinois grant of 1850, 
in which the price of the alternate sections reserved 
by Government was doubled, are those relating to 
certain lands in Ohio. The amount of those re- 
served sections is 259,423.96 acres, of which, up 
to the 30th of September last, nearly one half had 
been sold for two dollars and fifty cents per acre. 
No returns have been received as yet from the ' 
lands reserved by the grant of the last Congress to 
the State of Illinois. But the case of the Ohio 
grant .shows that the douiihng of the price of the 
alternate sections reserved to the United States in 
internal improvement grants is not a nullity. It 
is a reality which secures the Government from all 
loss. 

I trust it will be borne in mind, that under the 
acts granting land to soldiers, warrants can be [ 
located only on land subject to private entry. 
Now, all the lands in northern Missouri are sub- 
ject to private entry, and have been for sixteen 
years and more. Whatever, therefore, adds to the 
value of these lands is for the benefit of soldiers » 
having land warrants, whether in Maine, Virginia, j 
or Texas. So that the Hannibal and St. Joseph 
railroad grant is not only recommended by its i 
intrinsic merits, but by the tendency it will have i 
to benefit a large and most meritorious class of our 
citizens who are scattered all over the Union. 

What is theextenlof thegrantlask.' I am able 
to answer this question from official documeiits. 
The whole amount of public lands witliin six miles 
of each side of the proposed route of the Hannibal 
and St. Joseph railroad was, on the Uih day of 
April, 1847, 640,302 acres. A portion of these 
lands has passed into private hands since that 
time. All of them have been subject to private 
entry for many years— most of them sixteen years 
and upwards — so that they have been culled over 
and over again, and rejected as worth less than 
one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre. The 
most that Missouri can receive by the grant I ask 
is 320,181 acres of refuse land. She would not 
probably receive more than 250,000 acres if the 
grant should pass to-day. And in return for that, 
she not only engages to construct a railroad whi^h 
will enhance your public domain two or three times 



as much as this grant will amount to, but to carry 
your troops and munitions of war over the road 
free of all charge forever, and to transport your 
mails at such prices as you shall prescribe. 
■ When Missouri came into the Union, the Fed- 
eral Government required her to promise not to 
tax the public lands within her limits " for the 
term of five years from and after the day of sale." 
In consideration of this promise, the United States 
agreed to pay to the State of Missouri five per 
cent, of the net proceeds of the sale of lands lying 
within her limits, of v.-hich three fifths was to be 
applied to purposes of internal improvements by 
her Legislature; and " the other two fifths in de- 
fraying, under the direction of Congress, the ex- 
penses to be incurred in the making of a road or 
roads, canal or canals, leading to the said State." 
In order to discharge a public debt, the United 
States have granted so me. 30 ,000 ,000 or 40,000,000 
acres of land to those who have been in our mili- 
tary service in a time of war. A large amount of 
those lands has been located in Missouri, and 
more will be located there still. Those lands not 
being disposed of by this Government for money, 
the State of Missouri receives nothing for exempt- 
ing them from taxation. The strict letter of the 
compact does not, perhaps, entitle her to anything. 
But surely a fair and liberal spirit on the part 
of the United States will give Missouri some 
equivalent for not taxing the lands within her 
limits w4iich have been and will be located by mili- 
tary warrants. Missouri supposed that she was 
' to receive a valuable consideration for her agree- 
ment not to tax tlie public lands " for the term of 
1 five years from and after the day of sale." The 
United States so understood it. Now, suppose all 
! the public domain in Missouri should be absorbed 
j by land warrants, what would she receive for not 
taxing the lands of this Government.' Nothing, 
I absolutely nothing. And would that be a fair and 
' bona fide execution of her compact with the Uni- 
I ted States on the part of the latter.' On the con- 
trary, would not the United States be obnoxious 
to the charge of " palteruig in a double sense.-" of 
keeping "the word of promise to our ear and 
breaking it to our hope.'" 
'I Missouri does not ask that the land given to sol- 
diers should be treated absolutely as land sold for 
cash. All she asks is, that inasmuch as the policy 
of granting bounty land is for the benefit of citizens 
of every State, each State shall bear its proportion 
of whatever expense and burden that policy costs. 
Missouri is willing to give up a part of her three 
per cent., but she'does not think she should be re- 
quired to relinquish all. And it appears tome 
that this Government cannot discharge the equita- 
ble demands of Missouri on better terms to the 
nation than by inakins: the grant I am urgmg. 

When Missouri makes a road through the land 
of her citizens, the landed proprietors benefited by 
the work are compelled to pay their share towai-ds 
its construction, in the form of taxes. As the 
value of their land is increased, their taxes are 
increased also. Now, this Government is a great 
landed proprietor, and owns large domains in the 
State of Missouri. Is it right, is it just, is it fair, 
under the.se circumstances, that while private indi- 
viduals are compelled to pay for improvements 
which add to the value of their estates, the Federal 
Government should receive precisely the same 
benefits and not contribute one dollar? Let gen- 



6 



tiemen from the old States revolve this matter in 
their minds, and I am sure they will dismiss some 
of the opposition which they manifest towards 
donations of kinds to the new States. 

It should be borne in mind that all the new 
States receive five per cent, of the net proceeds of 
the sales of the public lands within their limits, 
for the purposes of internal improvements, except 
Missouri, Illinois, Jndiana, and Ohio. They re- 
ceive but three per cent, for that object, the other 
two per cent, being retained in the Treasury for 
constructing, under the direction of Congress, a 
road or roads, a canal or canals, leading towards 
the limits of the enumerated States. It should 
also be rememltered, that this portion of the public 
lands is not given to the new States as a gratuity. 
It is given in return for the non-taxation of the 
public domain for a term of " five years from and 
after the day of sale." This arrangement has 
never been a favorite with the new" States. It 
originated with Congress, and was forced upon 
the Western States as a condition to their admis- 
sion into the Union. From the statement just 
made, it will be perceived that Missouri, Illinois, 
Indiana, and Ohio, stand on precisely the same 
grounds, so fir as their compacts with the United 
States are concerned. But how different, how 
widely difterent, is the treatment wliicli Congress 
has meted out to them. In Ohio §2,812,034 21 
have been expended on the Cumberland road. In 
Indiana $,1,128,289 50, and in Illinois ^,749^445 30 
have been spent on the same work. In Missouri 
not one single cent has been expended by this 
Government on any like enterprise. Besides this, 
Ohio has received upwards of eleven hundred 
thousand acres of public land for the purpose of 
internal improvements. Indiana has received up- 
wards of fourteen hundred thousand acres, and 
Illinois has received upwards of three millions of 
acres for ca)ials and railroads. Missouri has 
received nothing. Why this difference in the 
policy of Congress towards these four States.' Is 
not Missouri faithful in the discharge of her duties 
to the Union.' Is she not upright in her engage- 
ments with her sisters.' Is she not worthy'of 
membership in this Confederacy.' I have never 
heard any such charges made against Missouri, 
and I trust that the neglect of Congress has been 
unintentional. There is certainly no equity in 
treating Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois with marked 
kindness, while you turn away from Missouri as 
from a step-child. 

It is, however, objected, that the grants of land 
to the new States for the purposes of internal im- 
provement are injurious to the old States. In what 
way.' I inquire. It has been shown that those 
grants do not diminish the revenues of the country, 
but largely increase them. They diffuse the com- 
forts and conveniences of life into many a habha- 
tion and family that are now cheerless. They 
spread education and intelligence. They build up 
school-houses and churches, and they bring into 
communion and friendly intercourse disiant parts 
of the Republic. Surely there is nothing in all 
this of wliich any member of the Union ought to 
complain. 

But if the policy of granting land to the new 
States for railroad purposes is to stop, let justice 
be done to both sections of the Union. Hereto- 
fore those grants have been confined almost exclu- 
sively to the free States. Let Missouri , Arkansas, 



[ Mississippi, and other Southern States be placed 

upon an equal footing with Ohio, Indiana, and 

I Illinoi.s, before you ref'use all grants. To stop be- 

I fore this is done would give color, at least, to the 

charge sometimes made, that the majority of this 

House cannot and will not do justice to the South- 

I ern part of the Uiiion. 

I The old States should not overlook the fact that 
j they have received all the unappropriated lands 
j which were within their limits at the date of the 
I Revolution. Massachusetts and Maine, even at 
i this moment, possess a large domain that is undis- 
posed of. Now all of those lands were acquired 
by the common blood and treasure of the nation. 
The lands of Maine and Virginia and Georgia, 
which were unappropriated at the time of our 
Revolution, were as much the common acquisition 
of the whole Union, as the public lands in any of 
the Western States. But the old States, I reher- 
ate, received every foot of unappropriated land 
within their limits. " And yet when a new State asks 
for a small part of the public land within its limits, 
in discharge of high and important services, ren- 
dered by it in the construction of railroads through 
the Government domain, we hear the cry. Injustice 
to the old States. Place the new States on the 
same footing with the old States, and you would 
give them all the waste lands within their limits. 
This we do not ask. We are not so rapacious as 
the Atlantic States were when they occupied our 
position. All that we ask is a small appropria- 
tion, whicji, while it increases the receipts of the 
Treasury, will afford some remuneration for our 
services to the nation at large. 

No other expenditure of public money has re- 
sulted in so much and so general good as that 
which has had for its object the settlement of the 
West. Separate the new States from the old ones; 
strike off the Valley of the Mississippi, even in 
imagination, from the Atlantic seaboard, and you 
will possibly form some small conception of the 
benefits which the settlement and improvement of 
the public lands have had upon our national 
wealth, greatness, and prosperity. The fortifi- 
cation of your coast, your Navy, your Army, are 
all useful; but no statesman will pretend that any 
one or all of these combined has contributed one 
tenth as much to our reputation abroad, or our 
security at home, as the settlement of the great 
West. Now, while the settlement of the West 
has been of greater advantage to the whole coun- 
try than almost anything else which has trans- 
pired in our history, it has repaid by millions all 
the expenses it has occasioned to the Government. 
Your public domain has cost you $74,757,879 58. 
Up to this time it has yielded you $135,337,093 17— 
jusj: $60,381 ,213 79 more than it cost you. If the 
Navy, l>esides protecti)ig our commerce, had yield- 
ed to the Treasury double the money it has cost, 
how irresistible would be an application for an 
appropriation to that branch of the service ! But 
the settlement of the public domain has operated 
in that manner. It has increased the general 
welfare, it has augmented the resources and nnd- 
tiplied the power of the country, and it has at the 
same time repaid to the Government two dollars 
for every one it has cost. 

Will not gentlemen be instructed by the history 
of the past.' Experience has taught us that every 
foot of land brought under cultivation in a new 
State adds to the wealth and prosperity of all. 



" The current of emigration, from one part of the 
' Union to the otlier — from the old to the new 
' States — rolls back a golden tide of trade and l)usi- 
' ness. The old States now supply nearly all the. 
' wants of the farmers of the Valley of the West, 
' and hence its prosperity wonderfully promotes 
' the welfiire of the older States of the Union. The 
' jioor emigrant from tlie old States, who estab- 
' lishes a farm in the West, soon contributes more 
'to the wealth and commerce of the State he left 
' than if he had remained there ni dependent pov- 
' erty. The prosperity of the new States reacts, 
' through the channel of trade and business, m 
' favor of the old States, and hence the wonderful 
'growth of the whole country." This is a fair 
statement of the fact. Every man of observation 
knows it to be true, and still you hesitate to be lib- 
eral to the new States — no, sir, not liberal, but just. 
Mr. Chairman, Congress should either graduate 
the price of the public lands, or aid in enhancing 
the value of those which have been for a longtime 
in market. All the public lands near our navi- 
gable rivers are readily sold and settled. So it is 
with the best lands in the interior. But the public 
lands of the poorer class remain unoccupied for years 
after they have been subject to private entry, di- 
viding neighborhoods, keeping settlements sparse, 
and rendering it impossible, very frequently, for 



our people to enjoy even the blessings of common 
schools. In order to remedy this evil, the new 
States have been applying to Congress for more 
than a quarter of a century to graduate the price 
of the public domain. This has been steadily re- 
fused. Now, in order to settle our waste lands, 
we ask you to aid in increasing its value, by grants 
to railroads, which will enaljle Government to sell 
the public domain at its present minimum in all 
cases, and at double the minimum in many in- 
stances. 

I hope gentlemen will not oppose this policy 
because the new States are to be its immediate 
beneficiaries. What would bethoughtif the West 
should vote against a proposition to fortify an im- 
portant seaport because the money necessary to 
that purpose would be expended on the coast? 
Why, everybody would say, such a motive is 
unworthy an American citizen. Will you, then, 
apply a rule to the new States, which, if sought 
to be applied to the old States, would be repudiated 
as disgraceful in its conception and purposes.' 
Rather inquire whether the propositions relative 
to grants of land to the West, are for the benefit 
of the nation and within your constitutional pow- 
er. And being satisfied in the affirmative on both 
propositions, do not withhold your support be- 
cause the donation is to a new State. 



LiBRAtn OF CONGRESS 1 

011 898 406 7 n 



